Puck restrains Drake's friend, Simon Cheyneys, from saying what is on his mind about the hanging of Thomas Doughty by Drake's orders on the Golden Hind. His name comes up and is dismissed. Simon's aunt prophesies that Drake will bury his heart beside the road he will open from east to west and back again; and, before the tale begins, the children have seen Cattiwow, the woodman, lash his team-leader to get the last ounce of effort out of him, and Simon has pointed out to them that Cattiwow `cherished his horse, but he'd ha' laid him open in that pinch'."The Eye of Allah"(in Debits and Credits).
But such knowledge is too hard for children, and the tale moves on another course, towards the Armada that Dan has been hoping for. Nonetheless they feel - I felt, when I failed to get any information about Mus' Doughty out of my family - that some unknown and cruel obligation, such as confronts at times the leaders of men, had awaited Frankie by the side of the road he opened. The tale puzzled me; the bits did not seem to come together, or, as I should say now, the pattern was incomplete.
What is full in the child's vision, and very satisfactory, is the opportunity that comes at length to the modest home-keeping burgess of Rye to supply Drake's need for stores and ammunition in the middle of the fight with the Armada, and Drake courteously embracing his friend before all his great captains and causing his ship's music to play him away with honour. This is a situation full of the most reassuring moral and emotional lights.
Also, in case Simple Simon should be held too cheap, there are his little models of iron ships that floated, but were given up, since what England needed of Rye was wooden ships. They were `untimely', like the microscope of
When captaines couragious, whom death cold not daunte,The ballad was clearly known to Kipling, since he used the phrase 'Captains Courageous' as the title of his novel about fishermen on the Grand Banks. See Percy's Reliques(2nd series, Bk. 2).
Did march to the siege of the citty of Gaunt,
They mustred their souldiers by two and by three,
And the formost in battle was Mary Ambree...
[September 30th 2010] Publication This story was first published in The Delineator in June 1910, and Nash's Magazine in July 1910. It was collected in Rewards and Fairies later in the same year. The Story Up in the woods a great tree-trunk is being hauled down the hill to be a keel for a new ship. With Puck, Dan and Una meet Simon Cheyneys, shipbuilder and burgess of Rye in the days of Queen Elizabeth. He tells how as a lad he shipped with Francis Drake ('Frankie') in the 'fetching trade', sailing across the Narrow Seas to rescue Protestant refugees from Spanish persecution. This was Drake's apprenticeship in handling a ship in dangerous waters, and fighting the Spaniards. Drake is the real hero of this tale. but Simon had been his good friend, a friend 'that sticketh closer than a brother'. Simon is injured by a Spanish cannon-ball, and goes ashore, and soon takes over his uncle's shipyard. He doesn't see Frankie for twenty years. Little is said about him during that time, in which he sailed round the world, and hanged his best friend 'Mus' Doughty' on the way, for mutiny. Puck warns Simon against telling the children about the incident, but we are left with a sense that a lot had happened. In 1588 the Spanish Armada sails up Channel, harried by Drake and his smaller English ships. From Rye Simon and his aunt bring out all the stores that Frankie will need, and give him the supply vessel as a fireship, to help force the Spaniards onto the Dutch sands he knows so well. The friendship has born good fruit, but there is a feeling of sadness at the end of the story. Background Mary Lascelles in The Story-Teller Retrieves the Past discusses Kipling's use of historical material in this story. The sources she proposes are: John Barrow's Voyages and Explorations of Sir Francis Drake (1843), J. L. Motley's History of the United Netherlands (1869), and J. S. Corbett's Drake and the Tudor Navy (1899). Some critical comments |